- Sun Jan 20, 2013 12:00 am
#34966
Complete Question Explanation
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14138)
The correct answer choice is (E)
This Author Perspective question provides no conceptual or textual reference point, which is why the
process of elimination is likely to prove once again key: any answer choice that cannot be proven by
the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): It is unclear how the dependence of corridos on ready-made lines could have
hindered their makers’ effective use of metaphor. The author never alludes to that fact.
Answer choice (B): This is an attractive, but incorrect, answer choice. Although the corrido does
indeed use language that is familiar mainly to local audiences, the passage draws no comparisons
between corridos and other ballad forms. It is entirely possible that the corrido is not unique in its
use of familiar linguistic conventions, which is why answer choice (B) cannot be proven with the
requisite degree of certainty.
Answer choice (C): Just because corridos originated in Eighteenth-century Spain does not mean that
their imagery can also be identified in Spanish ballads. Corridos draw upon imagery and narrative
themes specific to the Border region (lines 8-9 and 35-37), suggesting that any thematic or linguistic
overlap between them and the Spanish ballads might be purely coincidental.
Answer choice (D): Corridos were not necessarily free from the constraints of rhymed ballad forms.
On the contrary: the second line of the despedida varies “according to exigencies of rhyme” (line
50). In other words, the second line varies because it has to rhyme with the fourth, which carries the
name of the corrido.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The despedida may be the clearest marker
of the corrido’s uniqueness, but it adds little narrative value to the song. Indeed, the despedida simply
confirms that the task of relating an authentic Border tale has been accomplished (lines 52-54). It is
reasonable to infer that even without a surviving despedida, a corrido would still be identifiable as
such given the thematic and linguistic conventions typified by it.
(See the complete passage discussion here: lsat/viewtopic.php?t=14138)
The correct answer choice is (E)
This Author Perspective question provides no conceptual or textual reference point, which is why the
process of elimination is likely to prove once again key: any answer choice that cannot be proven by
the passage will be incorrect.
Answer choice (A): It is unclear how the dependence of corridos on ready-made lines could have
hindered their makers’ effective use of metaphor. The author never alludes to that fact.
Answer choice (B): This is an attractive, but incorrect, answer choice. Although the corrido does
indeed use language that is familiar mainly to local audiences, the passage draws no comparisons
between corridos and other ballad forms. It is entirely possible that the corrido is not unique in its
use of familiar linguistic conventions, which is why answer choice (B) cannot be proven with the
requisite degree of certainty.
Answer choice (C): Just because corridos originated in Eighteenth-century Spain does not mean that
their imagery can also be identified in Spanish ballads. Corridos draw upon imagery and narrative
themes specific to the Border region (lines 8-9 and 35-37), suggesting that any thematic or linguistic
overlap between them and the Spanish ballads might be purely coincidental.
Answer choice (D): Corridos were not necessarily free from the constraints of rhymed ballad forms.
On the contrary: the second line of the despedida varies “according to exigencies of rhyme” (line
50). In other words, the second line varies because it has to rhyme with the fourth, which carries the
name of the corrido.
Answer choice (E): This is the correct answer choice. The despedida may be the clearest marker
of the corrido’s uniqueness, but it adds little narrative value to the song. Indeed, the despedida simply
confirms that the task of relating an authentic Border tale has been accomplished (lines 52-54). It is
reasonable to infer that even without a surviving despedida, a corrido would still be identifiable as
such given the thematic and linguistic conventions typified by it.